Covid virus under microscope

Isle of Wight Covid-19 figures: Round up of hospital admissions, positive tests, vaccinations, deaths and age breakdowns up to 28th Sept 2022

News OnTheWight shares a comprehensive update on hospitalisations, vaccinations, deaths and positive Covid-19 tests on the Isle of Wight.

The figures are provided by NHS England and the Office for National Statistics and rely on people testing positive to report their results.

Jump to:

Covid patients in hospital
As of 26th September 2022, Covid dashboard reveals that 10 new Covid-19 patients were admitted to St Mary’s Hospital (there were 7 new patients the previous week).

It also shows that as of 28th September the number of Covid-19 patients in hospital was 10.

The Government dashboard also reports that one of those Covid patients is relying on mechanical ventilation, as of 28th September.

Since records began, the total number of Covid-19 patients admitted to hospital is 1,713.

Vaccinations
The number of Covid-19 vaccinations given on the Isle of Wight totals 315,166 (83 more since last week).

As of 28th September 2022, the total number of people who have received their:

  • first dose of Covid-19 vaccine was 113,605 (up 9 from last week).
  • second dose of Covid-19 vaccine was 109,129 (up 18 from last week).
  • booster or third dose of Covid-19 vaccine was 92,432 (up 56 from last week).

Deaths
An additional two people died with Covid-19 on the death certificate for the week ending 16th September, according to the Government dashboard.

At that date, the cumulative number of deaths with Covid-19 on the death certificate on the Isle of Wight since the start of the pandemic was 456.

Confirmed positive cases
As free testing and the obligation to report a positive test has been abolished, the figures are likely to be higher than official sources state.

The latest confirmed data for the number of new positive Coronavirus (Covid-19) tests over seven days (22nd September – 28th September) on the Isle of Wight totals 131 – a rate per 100,000 population of 93.

23 of those are thought to be reinfections (ie. people who have had Covid before and caught it again). Last week this was 18.

The cumulative total since the pandemic began now stands at 44,096 – a rate per 100,000 population of 31,274.

Watch the trend
The graph below shows the changes to rolling seven day figure over the last week – mouseover to see figures.

The graph below shows the changes to daily rates over the last four weeks – mouseover to see daily figures.

Age breakdown
The table below shows the breakdown of positive Covid-19 tests over the last reported week for under 20s, 20-59 year olds and 60+ compared to the previous week (there is a lag on this data).

Five-year age groups also included below those.

Age11th-17th Sep18th-24th Sep
0_1916
20-593041
60+4247
0_401
5_901
10_1412
15_1902
20_2423
25_2927
30_3453
35_3922
40_4466
45_4949
50_5453
55_5948
60_64127
65_69117
70_7489
75_79713
80_8445
85_8904
90+02
Total7394

Source: Covid Dashboard and ONS

Image: Fusion Medical Animation under CC BY 2.0

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henry
1, April 2023 4:33 pm

It is the first stage of assessing private insurance costs for medical treatment depending on your medical history.

At present with health travel insurance it generally doesn’t cover you, unless you pay considerably more, for pre existing illnesses. This new scheme will assess your likelihood to suffer with a particular condition in the future, and will charge you accordingly.

thedocker18
1, April 2023 10:40 pm

* small print – Big Data analysis outcomes will be shared with Big Pharma and Insurance companies.

Be warned, folk in US with Diabetes pay $900 a dose or die if they can’t afford it.

You could start by Not Voting Tory at the next election.

five4three2one
Reply to  thedocker18
2, April 2023 7:40 pm

It was Labour that brought in private contractors.

Ian Young
Reply to  five4three2one
2, April 2023 8:17 pm

The last Labour Government certainly never had a problem using spare capacity in the Private Sector to improve outcomes for NHS patients. Many people facing an 18 month wait for treatment welcomed the early relief from pain and discomfort that this policy afforded them. From what I read Wes Streeting is proposing much the same policy if Labour were to win the next General Election. We should… Read more »

Steve Goodman
1, April 2023 10:50 pm

I’m reminded of decades of related reports published by the likes of Private Eye and the Guardian, like two from the latter in the last two days. Today (Saturday) I read that “Computer systems have abruptly stopped working at the outsourcing group Capita, knocking out council phone lines and triggering fears that a company that runs crucial operations for the NHS and the military could be under… Read more »

movinon
Reply to  Steve Goodman
2, April 2023 9:19 pm

The media thrives by exciting people. In this case apparently not a cyber attack. Statement by Capita: “Following a technical problem which has affected access to some of our services today, we can confirm that we have identified an IT issue that is primarily impacting our internal systems. We are working to swiftly restore those services that have been affected and will issue a further update in… Read more »

Steve Goodman
Reply to  movinon
17, April 2023 10:47 am

Actually, as reported at the time, going back to ink and paper was exactly what had to happen when the computer system stopped running, in order to maintain some services at councils and elsewhere. And following some Easter break meetings I now know that not everyone at Capita would agree that the “technical problem/ IT issue” was something other than a cyber attack. We do know that… Read more »

Steve Goodman
Reply to  movinon
19, April 2023 5:33 pm

The Guardian reports some more related excitement today from government minister Oliver Dowden at a Belfast cyber conference, issuing a national alert to key businesses amid growing international concern about Russian hackers seeking “to disrupt or destroy” parts of the UK’s critical infrastructure…

Steve Goodman
Reply to  movinon
20, April 2023 8:35 am

Further confirmation of Crapita’s costly ‘not a cyber attack’ BS comes on the opening page of the current Private Eye (1596). They did have to admit to the Information Commissioner that the three day outage which they first falsely described as an “internal IT issue” was actually a Russian cyber attack. The Eye also reports on the outsourcing giant’s BS marketing for it’s security management services…”We’re cyber… Read more »

Tamara
2, April 2023 1:36 am

There will be legal challenges. The Government pledged in 2021 to consult the public before working with Palantir again, after openDemocracy took them to court. Now they are reneging on that agreement. In 2021, after secret government plans to hand over our medical data were leaked, many thousands of people opted out. To opt out of primary care records ‘sharing’, we had to ask for a form… Read more »

Jenny Smart
2, April 2023 7:26 am

It was assumed that if you don’t opt out that you agreed the government owned your medical data and could do want it wanted with it, ie sell it to the highest bidder. The way they went about things is fundamentally wrong, you should have been asked to opt in, not out, of the system. Basically, with the Tories you own nothing, they own your medical data,not… Read more »

Snowwolf1
2, April 2023 9:00 am

So much or Data protection, I agreed to share info with NHS not USA. Surely some legal action needs to be taken before our records are distributed world wide.

marty
2, April 2023 10:29 am

What people need to understand is that the Government (indeed most Governments) do not care one iota about the people only those power groups that help them to remain in office.

melting
2, April 2023 11:30 am

Where did Maggie find this information, if it has all been done in secret. So what can we do about it? I am feeling rather scared-we are told a lot of personal data is collected every time we use a credit card, and mobile phones too. It seems as if Big Brother is here and we are helpless.

Tamara
2, April 2023 3:05 pm

For news of what is really happening in this country and overseas, don’t rely solely, as most people do, on the television news and national press. Most newspapers are owned by big news corporations and unlikely to have editorial independence. Subscribe to and support investigative journalism online: such as openDemocracy, Big Brother Watch and Byline Times, and to campaign groups specialising in particular issues, such as Just… Read more »

Tamara
Reply to  Tamara
2, April 2023 4:19 pm

The Guardian is also noted for its investigative reporting and can be subscribed to and supported online.

five4three2one
Reply to  Tamara
2, April 2023 8:02 pm

And Owen Jones and George Monboit.

VentnorLad
2, April 2023 5:33 pm

“Do we really need a central database for all NHS records?” I’m a little torn with this one. There are certainly things I’d like central records for. If I’m away from home on holiday or working, I’d like any clinician treating me to have full, timely access to my individual medical record to aid in decision making about my care. I’m also very content to have my… Read more »

five4three2one
2, April 2023 8:00 pm

PLEASE PAY ATTRENTION TO WHAT IS HAPPENING HERE. So much for the idea to add another layer of control and remove privacy Has anyone looked at the share structure? Anyone looked at who owns the shares in Palantir either directly or through holding companies off shore or shell companies etc? I doubt it. This is not some small company with a community feel it is a billion… Read more »

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